The simplistic Windows Start screen comes with bold, oversized buttons, large letters, and bright colors that shout from the screen. They’re relatively easy to poke with a fingertip or mouse.

The Windows desktop, by contrast, comes with miniscule, monochrome buttons, tiny lettering, and windows with pencil-thin borders. The windows come with way too many parts, all with confusing names that programs expect you to remember. To give you a hand, this chapter provides a lesson in windows anatomy and navigation.

I’ve dissected each part of a window so you know what happens when you click — or touch — each portion. By all means, use this book’s margins to scribble notes as you move from the simplistic Start screen to the powerful yet complicated Windows desktop. ...

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